This must be the season for new picture books because my email box is full of books waiting to be reviewed. I'm happy to share one by author and self-proclaimed backyard explorer, Sue Heavenrich.
REVIEW
"to grow from the seed that Molly sowed."
(Are you starting to hear the rhythm?)
Next to arrive on the scene are leaves as "big as your head turning sunlight to food wherever they spread."
As Molly tends to her pumpkin plant, the vine grows and grows and begins to produce blossoms.
The author makes sure that her readers understand the important role that bees have in pollination.
Molly proudly displays her pumpkin "big and round" which is "sliced and diced and baked in a pan and left on the table till feasting began."
for the seed and the sprout,
for the vine and the leaves,
for the flowers that nourished the hardworking bees.
And the wonderful pie that Molly made.
Parents, grandparents, and educators-beware! Every child who hears this book will want to:
a) scoop out a pumpkin and save the seeds
b) make a pie
c) plant pumpkin seeds next spring!
Chamisa Kellog's bright illustrations will grab young readers' attention as they are drawn into The Pie That Molly Grew.
Mini-Author Interview
Carol: I’m curious about the different types of bees that you have seen pollinating your garden. Can you talk about that a bit?
Sue: I love watching the insects that share my garden and listening to their buzzing and humming. I started looking at them more closely when I became one of the community science volunteers at the Great Sunflower Project (https://www.greatsunflower.org), growing flowers for – and counting – the pollinators in my garden. And by “growing flowers” I mean that I allow flowers that some folks call weeds to grow in my garden bed: Queen Anne’s lace, yarrow, dead nettle, mullien, red clover – the bees love clover! I don’t know the names to all the bees that visit, but I’ll see common eastern bumble bees, tricolor bumble bees, yellow bumble bees, carpenter bees (they are the ones with shiny bee butts!), leafcutter bees, metallic green sweat bees, and squash bees. There are also a number of flower-pollinating flies, too.
A bee doing her job in Sue's garden.
Carol: Do you ever save your pumpkin seeds?
Sue: I do. Saving the seeds from a pumpkin is pretty easy: cut open the pumpkin (which you have to do whether you’re baking it for pie or making a jack-o-lantern) and scoop out the guts. Then I pull out bunches of seeds and rinse them in a strainer to get the strings off, and let them dry on a wax paper-lined cookie sheet for a few days. Pumpkins are related to other squashes, cukes, and melons, and sometimes they can be cross-pollinated. So you might get a surprise when you plant your saved seeds – especially if your pumpkins were growing within flight distance of zucchinis. But hey! It’s science.
*****
Aug. 18 - at Carol Baldwin’s blog & a giveaway!
Aug. 23 - with Kathy Halsey on the GROG blog
Aug. 25 - over at Beth Anderson's blog
Aug 28 - with Lauri Fortino at Frog on a Blog
13 comments:
I would love to own this book. What a fun and learning story. And, yum, pumpkin pie at the end. What's not to like?!?
Thanks, Barb. Your name starts the list!
What a fun to combine the rhythm & info for this story. Truly brilliant. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks, Marci. I agree!
We had a large garden when the kids were younger and grew all sorts of things. We remember harvesting the pumpkins and making lots of pumpkin pies that were ultimately frozen for later use. What a sweet book about a child’s introduction to gardening and harvesting…waiting for good things to come.
Thanks you for sharing it, Danielle. you're in twice! And I agree about the whipped cream!
Dear Carol,
The Pie that Molly Grew sounds interesting and the illustrations are really cute.
Thanks for sharing.
Don't put me in for the drawing.
Sincerely,
Joan
Thanks, Joan, for visiting my blog!
You are welcome!
Love, Joan
Looks like a super cute book for fall!
Thanks for your comment, Kathy. But I need your email address to enter you in this giveaway.
This picture book looks so good for my youngest granddaughter, Maggie. She would love it!
Gail HURLBURT
gailhurlburt@gmail.com
Thanks, Gail. You're in!
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